ScholarGate
Assistent
Process / pipelineAffordability indices / cost-burden measures

Housing Affordability Index

A housing affordability index summarises how the cost of housing in a city or market relates to what households can pay, condensing prices, rents and incomes into a single interpretable number. The simplest forms are ratios — the median house price divided by median income, or housing outlays as a share of income — while the residual-income approach championed by Michael Stone instead asks what is left for everything else after housing is paid. Together these measures let analysts compare affordability across places and over time, flag cost-burdened populations, and track housing stress as markets shift.

Åbn i MethodMindSnartAnvend, sammenlign, få vejledning
Værktøjer og ressourcer
Hent slides
Lær og udforsk
VideoSnart

Læs hele metoden

Kun for medlemmer

Log ind med en gratis konto for at læse dette afsnit.

Log ind

Metodekort

Nabolaget af beslægtede metoder — vælg en knude for at udforske.

Kilder

  1. Stone, M. E. (2006). What is housing affordability? The case for the residual income approach. Housing Policy Debate, 17(1), 151–184. DOI: 10.1080/10511482.2006.9521564

Sådan citerer du denne side

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Housing Affordability Index (Cost-to-Income Ratios and Residual-Income Measures). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/da/urban-studies/housing-affordability-index

Hvilken metode?

Stil denne metode ved siden af dens nærmeste slægtninge, og læs dem side om side — biblioteket lægger bøgerne på bordet; valget er dit.

Sammenlign side om side

Refereret af

ScholarGateHousing Affordability Index (Housing Affordability Index (Cost-to-Income Ratios and Residual-Income Measures)). Hentet 2026-06-24 fra https://scholargate.app/da/urban-studies/housing-affordability-index · Datasæt: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026